Online Encyclopedia

ERMINE STREET

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 750 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ERMINE STREET  . Documents and writers of the 1th and succeeding centuries occasionally mention four " royal roads" in Britain—Icknield Street, Erning or
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Ermine Street, Watling Street and Foss Way—as
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standing apart from all other existing roads and enjoying the
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special
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protection of the king . Unfortunately these authorities are not at all agreed as to their precise course; the roads themselves do not occur as specially privileged in actual legal or other practice, and it is likely that the category of Four Roads is the invention of a lawyer or an
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antiquary . The names are, however, attested to some extentby early charters which name them among other roads, as boundaries . From these charters we know that Icknield Street ran along the Berkshire
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downs and the Chilterns, that Ermine Street ran more or, less due north through Huntingdonshire, that Watling Street ran north-west across the midlands from
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London to Shrewsbury, and Foss diagonally to it from Lincoln or Leicester to Bath and
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mid-Somerset . This evidence only proves the existence of these roads in Saxon and Norman days, But they all seem to be much older . Icknield Street is probably a prehistoric ridgeway along the downs, utilized perhaps by the Romans near its eastern end, but in general not
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Roman . Ermine Street coincides with
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part of a
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line of Roman roads leading north from London through Huntingdon to Lincoln . This line is followed by the Old North Road through
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Cheshunt, Bunting-ford,
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Royston, and Huntingdon to
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Castor near
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Peterborough; and thence it can be traced through lanes and byways past Ancaster to Lincoln . Watling Street is the Roman
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highway from London by St
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Alban's (
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Verulamium) to Wroxeter near Shrewsbury (Viroconium) . Foss is the Roman highway from Lincoln to Bath and Exeter . Hence it has been supposed, and is still frequently alleged, that the Four Roads were the
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principal highways of Roman Britain .

This, however, is not the

case . Icknield Street is not Roman and the three roads which follow Roman lines, Ermine Street, Watling Street, and Foss, held no
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peculiar position in the Romano-
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British road
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system (see BRITAIN: Roman) . In later times, the names Ermine Street, Icknield Street and Watling Street have been applied to other roads of Roman or" supposed Roman origin . This, however, is wholly the
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work of Elizabethan or subsequent antiquaries and deserves no credence . The derivations of the four names are unknown . Icknield, Ermine and Watling may be from
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English
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personal names; Foss, originally Fos, seems to be the
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Lat. fossa in its occasional
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medieval sense of a
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bank of upcast earth or stones, such as the agger of a road . (F . J .

End of Article: ERMINE STREET
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